A tour bus traveling from Washington DC, to Niagara Falls crashed in a wooded median in western New York on Sunday afternoon, killing two people and injuring 35, state police said.

A tour bus traveling from Washington DC, to Niagara Falls crashed in a wooded median in western New York on Sunday afternoon, killing two people and injuring 35, state police said.

The crash happened on Interstate 390 at 4.15 pm, and a preliminary report indicates that a tire blowout might have caused the wreck, New York State Police spokesman Mark O'Donnell said.

The bus, owned by Bedore Tours of North Tonawanda near Buffalo, left Washington on Sunday morning and stopped for lunch in Pennsylvania, O'Donnell said. He didn't have any details on the passengers.

O'Donnell said investigators will interview the driver and witnesses and inspect the vehicle as they try to determine what caused the crash. The driver lost control of the bus about 55 miles (88 kilometers) southeast of Rochester and veered down a grassy bank into the woods.

Three patients were taken by helicopter to Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester and a fourth was taken there by ambulance. Eight were taken to Noyes Memorial Hospital in Dansville. The rest were taken to other hospitals in the region.

In January 2005, a bus chartered by a Canadian women's youth hockey team rammed a parked tractor-trailer near Geneseo, about 30 miles (48 kilometers) north of Sunday's crash, killing four people. Investigators determined the driver's lack of sleep and inexperience led to the crash.

Attention to the tour bus industry and bus safety has been heightened since the March 12 crash of a bus returning to New York City's Chinatown after an overnight excursion to a Connecticut casino. Fifteen people were killed when the bus toppled off an elevated highway and struck a utility pole, peeling off its roof.

A passenger has said the driver fell asleep; the driver has said he was alert and well-rested. That crash is being investigated by New York State Police and the National Transportation Safety Board.